Panel limits testimony on Home Ranch deal
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- Although the Planning Commission has repeatedly invited
public input about the Home Ranch project, residents heard a different
message Monday night.
Planning Commission Chairwoman Katrina Foley told familiar faces at
the meeting that public comment would be limited to those who had not yet
spoken or information that had not yet been presented.
As Robin Lessler, president of Costa Mesa Citizens for Responsible
Growth, started to speak, Foley told her public comment would be
restricted to prevent the meeting from lasting too long.
“Late night meetings affect our decision-making process the next day,”
Foley said.
The chairwoman also added that audience members would have a chance to
address the commission again at a study session planned for Sept. 24.
In response, Mesa Verde resident Bryce Beuley spoke against Foley’s
decision and stormed out of the meeting in protest.
Beuley said it was ridiculous and unreasonable to limit public
comment.
“It is their job to be responsive to the public,” Beuley said. “I have
to get up and go to work too, but it is important for me to be here and
say what I feel. It should be important for them to hear it.”
Beuley said he plans to circulate recall petitions in response to the
limitation on public comment.
“Hopefully, next time it will be them walking away and not me,” he
said after he left the meeting.
Foley said she regretted the process made some angry, but noted that
city officials had made every effort to invite public comment and were
trying to reduce repetitive information.
The Planning Commission has held four public meetings about the Home
Ranch project in the past month, including an unusual study session in
which it allowed residents to give a counter-presentation to C.J.
Segerstrom & Sons’ plans.
Foley’s decision was supported by residents Jim Scott and Doug Sutton,
who both commended the commission’s handling of the hot topic.
“I think the Planning Commission is doing everything possible to hear
complete and balanced views about this project,” Sutton said.
The Home Ranch project -- which calls for an Ikea furniture store,
office and industrial space, and residential units on a former lima bean
field bordered by the San Diego Freeway, Fairview Road, Harbor Boulevard
and Sunflower Avenue -- has been revised many time in response to strong
opposition over the last 20 years.
Many of the same residents who were successful in stopping the
development the first two times it was proposed were at the meeting but
did not speak because of the restrictions.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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